Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n according_a believe_v scripture_n 1,612 5 5.8214 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A22641 St. Augustine, Of the citie of God vvith the learned comments of Io. Lod. Viues. Englished by I.H.; De civitate Dei. English Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo.; Healey, John, d. 1610.; Vives, Juan Luis, 1492-1540. 1610 (1610) STC 916; ESTC S106897 1,266,989 952

There are 18 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

all nature should lust after the women of earth and marrying them beget Gyants of them CHAP. 23. ●…is question wee touched at in our third booke but left it vndiscussed whe●…er the Angels being spirits could haue carnall knowledge of women for 〈◊〉 ●…itten He maketh his Angels spirits that a is those that are spirits hee 〈◊〉 his Angels by sending them on messages as hee please for the Greeke 〈◊〉 ●…rd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Latines call c Angelus is interpreted a messenger 〈◊〉 ●…ether he meant of their bodyes when he addeth And his ministers a fla●… or that he intimate that Gods ministers should burne with fiery zeale ●…ritie it is doubtfull yet doe the scriptures plainly auerre that the An●… appeared both in visible and palpable figures b And seeing it is so 〈◊〉 a report and so many auerre it eyther from their owne triall or from 〈◊〉 that are of indubitable honestie and credite that the Syluanes and 〈◊〉 commonly called e Incub●… haue often iniured women desiring and ac●…●…rnally with them and that certaine deuills whome the Frenchmen call 〈◊〉 doe continually practise this vncleannesse and tempt others to it which ●…ed by such persons and with such confidence that it were impudence 〈◊〉 it I dare not venter to determine any thing heere whether the 〈◊〉 beeing imbodyed in ayre for this ayre beeing violently mooued is 〈◊〉 ●…lt can suffer this lust or mooue it so as the women with whome 〈◊〉 ●…ixe many feele it f yet do I firmely beleeue that Gods Angels could 〈◊〉 ●…ll so at that time nor that the Apostle Peter did meane of them when he sayd If God spared not the Angels that had sinned but cast them downe into hell and deliuered them into chaines of darkenesse to be kept vnto damnation but rather of those that turned apostata's with the diuell their prince at first in him I meane that deceiued man-kinde in the serpent That men were also called the Angels of God the scripture testifieth also saying of Iohn Behold I send mine Angel before ●…hy face which shall prepare the way before thee And Malachie the prophet by a peculiar grace giuen him was called an Angell But some sticke at this that in this commixtion of them that were called Gods Angels with the women of earth there were Gyants begotten and borne as though that we haue no such extraordinary huge statured creatures euen in these our times Was there not a woman of late at Rome with her father and mother a little before it was sacked by the Gothes that was of a giantlike height in respect of all other It was wonderfull to see the concourse of those that came to see her and shee was the more admired in that her parents exceeded not our tallest ordinary stature Therefore there might bee giants borne before that the sonnes of God called also his Angells had any carnall confederacy with the daughters of men such I meane as liued in the fleshly course that is ere the sonnes of Seth medled with the daughters of Caine for the Scripture in Genesis saith thus So when men were multiplied vpon earth and there were daughters borne vnto them the sonnes of God saw the daughters of men that they were faire and they tooke them wiues of all that they liked Therefore the Lord said my spirit shall not alway striue with man because he is but flesh and his daies shal be 120. yeares There were Gyants in the earth in those daies yea and after that the sonnes of God came vnto the daughters of men and they had borne them children these were Gyants and in old time were men of renowne These words of holy writ shew plainely that there were Gyants vpon earth when the sonnes of God tooke the fayre daughters of men to bee their wiues g for the scripture vseth to call that which is faire good But there were Gyants borne after this for it saith There were Gyants vpon earth in those daies and after that the sonnes of God came vnto the daughters of men so that there were Gyants both then and before and whereas it saith They begot vnto themselues this sheweth that they had begotten children vnto God before and not vnto themselues that is not for lust but for their duty of propagation nor to make themselues vp any flaunting family but to increase the Cittizens of God whome they like Gods angels instructed to ground their hope on him as the sonne of the resurrection Seths sonne did who hoped to call vpon the name of the Lord in which hope he and all his sons might be sons and heires of life euerlasting But we may not take them to bee such Angels as were no men men they were without doubt and so saith the Scripture which hauing first sayd the Angels of God s●… the daughters of men that they were good and they tooke them wiues of all whome they liked addeth presently And the Lord said my spirit shall not alway striue with m●… because hee is but flesh For his spirit made them his Angels and sonnes but they declined downewards and therefore hee calleth them men by nature not by grace and flesh being the forsaken forsakers of the spirit The 70. call them the Angels and sonnes of God some bookes call them onely the sonnes of God leauing out Angels But h Aquila whome the Iewes prefer before all calls them neither but the sonnes of Gods both is true for they were both the sonnes of God and by his patronage the bretheren of their fathers and they were the sonnes of the Gods as borne of the Gods and their equalls according to that of the Psalme I haue said yee are Gods and yee are al sonnes of the most high for we●… do worthily beleeue that the 70. had the spirit of prophecy and that what soeuer they altered is set downe according to the truth of diuinity not after the pleasure of translators yet the Hebrew they say is doubtfull and may be interpreted 〈◊〉 the sonnes of God or of Gods Therefore let vs omit the scriptures that are 〈◊〉 i Apocripha because the old fathers of whome wee had the scriptures 〈◊〉 not the authors of those workes wherein though there bee some truths y●… their multitude of falshhoods maketh them of no canonicall authority S●… Scriptures questionlesse were written by Enoch the seauenth from 〈◊〉 As the canonicall k Epistle of Iude recordeth but it is not for ●…ng that they were left out of the Hebrew Canon which the Priests kept in 〈◊〉 ●…mple The reason was their antiquity procured a suspicion that they 〈◊〉 not truly diuine and an vncertainety whether Henoch were the author or 〈◊〉 ●…ing that such as should haue giuen them their credit vnto posterity neuer 〈◊〉 them And therefore those bookes that go in his name and containe those 〈◊〉 of the giants that ther fathers were no men are by good iudgements held 〈◊〉 ●…ne of his but counterfeite as the heretiques haue done many
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we translate seruice but with 〈◊〉 it onely to God their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we turne it Religion but still with a ●…ence to God their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wee haue no one word for but wee may 〈◊〉 worship which wee say is due onely to him that is the true God and ●…uants gods Wherefore if there be any blessed immortalls in hea●…●…ther loue vs nor would haue vs blessed them wee must not serue but 〈◊〉 loue vs and wish vs happinesse then truly they wish it vs from the 〈◊〉 they haue it Or shall theirs come from one stocke and ours from 〈◊〉 L. VIVES 〈◊〉 dominations Iamblichus diuides the supernall powers into Angels Archan●…s Heroes Principalities and Powers and those hee saith doe appeare in diuerse ●…ions In Myster All the other Platonists make them but gods and Daemones 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to serue but it grew to be vsed for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to worship Suidas But ●…e the seruice of men called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the place hee quoteth is 〈◊〉 c. Ephes. 6. 5. Hence ariseth the dictinction of adoratio Latria Dulia and ●…lla makes Latria and Dulia both one for seruice or bondage and sheweth it 〈◊〉 of Suidas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Seruice or bondage is mercenary For an ●…h in Xenophon I would redeeme this woman from slauery or bondage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O Cyrus Cyripaed lib. 3. then the wife replied Let him redeeme himselfe from bon●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 With his owne life Ibid. The scriptures also vse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for to bee seruile 〈◊〉 You shall doe no seruile worke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And againe Thou shall make 〈◊〉 to b●… slaue to thy Prince 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And in Iob a begger is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 haue the last syllable but one long c Wee worship And so doth holy ●…tion d Things vnder vs Rightly for Col●… is to handle or exercise so 〈◊〉 all that wee vse or practise learning armes sports the earth c. It is also to inhabite 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Such as till hired grounds are called coloni as they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in hired houses in citties and husbandmen that till their owne ground 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…nt forth to inhabit any where are called coloni Therevpon grew the name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…olonies to omit the Greekes and Asians The townes that send out the colonies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Metropolitane cities thereof f Tyrii The Tyrian●… built Carthage and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with Dido Elisa that ●…ed from Pig●…lion after the death of Sicheus her husband This 〈◊〉 is as common as a 〈◊〉 g 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All one with Latria saith Suidas and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 are all one belonging to the gods For Orp●… they say first taught the misteries of religion and because h●…e was 〈◊〉 Thracian hee called this duty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or else of Thre●… 〈◊〉 o●… word to see h It is ref●…rred Being taken for piety which is referred to our country p●…rents and ki●…d i The workes The vulgar call the mercifull godly mercy godlinesse So do the Spani●…ds and French that speake Latine th●… 〈◊〉 k Fore and. These two words some copie●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wherevpon it is said I will haue mercy and no sacrifice Os●… 6. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 None of the learned vse it in that sence indeed The opinion of Plotine the Platonist concerning the supernall illumination CHAP. 2. BVt wee and those great Philosophers haue no conflict about this question for they well saw and many of them plainely wrot that both their beatitude ●…dours had originall from the perticipation of an intellectual light which they ●…nted God and different from themselues this gaue them all their light and by the 〈◊〉 of this they were perfect blessed a in many places doth Plotine ex 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which we call the soule of this vniuerse hath the beati●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with vs ●…ly a light which it is not but which made it 〈…〉 it hath al the intelligible splendor This he ar●… 〈…〉 from the visible celestiall bodies compared with these 〈…〉 the 〈◊〉 for b one and the Moone for another for 〈…〉 held to proceed from the reflection of the Sunne So saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the reasona●… or intellectuall soule of whose nature all the 〈…〉 that are contained in Heauen hath no essence aboue it b●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 creat●…d both it and all the world nor haue those supernall cre●…tures their 〈◊〉 or vnderstanding of the truth from any other orig●…ll then ours hath herein truly agreeing with the scripture where it is wri●… 〈◊〉 There was a man sent from God whose name was Iohn the same came for a witnesse to beare witnesse of the light that allmen d through him might beleeue e He 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the light but 〈◊〉 to beare witnesse of the light That was the true light f 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that cometh into the world which difference sheweth that 〈◊〉 ●…sonable soule which was in Iohn could not bee the owne light but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…tion of ●…ther the true light This Iohn him-selfe confessed in his 〈◊〉 where he said Of ●…is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all we receiued L. VIVES 〈…〉 the contemplation of that good father ariseth all beatitude Pl●… 〈…〉 saith y● our soules after their temporal labours shal enioy 〈◊〉 〈…〉 with y● soule of the vniuerse b For one For the Prince 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ariseth the M●… for the worlds soule c Ther was A 〈◊〉 〈…〉 〈◊〉 ●…ger from 〈◊〉 consequently Iohn an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he could bring no such newes from any but God d Through him not in him 〈◊〉 for cursed is the man that trusteth in man but in the light by his testimonie yet 〈◊〉 cannot be distinguished to either side e Hee was not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Th●…ophilact will haue a misterie The Saints are lights You are the light of the Christ. for they are deriued from his light Thence followeth that That was the true 〈◊〉 saith Augustine because that which is lightened ab externo is light also 〈◊〉 true light that enlightneth Or the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may haue relation to the prece●…●…the sence bee Iohn was not that light of which I spake f Which lightneth not that 〈◊〉 ●…ghtned but because none are enlightned but by this light or as Chrysostome 〈◊〉 each man as farre as belongs to him to be lightned If any doe shutte their ●…st the beames the nature of the light doth not cause the darkenesse in them but 〈◊〉 ●…licious depriuing them-selues of such a good other-wise so generally spred 〈◊〉 word g That commeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Origen allegorizeth vpon it it lightneth 〈◊〉 into the world of vertues not of vices 〈◊〉 worship of God wherein the Platonists failed in worshipping good or
aduised them to remember the law of Moyses because he fore saw that would here-after miss-interprete much thereof hee addeth Behold I will send you a Heliah the Prophet before the comming of the great and fearefull day of the Lord and hee shall turne the heart of the fathers to the children and of the children to the fathers least I come and smite the earth with cursing That this great and mighty Prophet Elias shall conuert b the Iewes vnto Christ before the iudgment by expounding them the lawe is most commonly beleeued and taught of vs Christians and is held as a point of infallible truth For we may well hope for the comming of him before the iudgment of Christ whome we do truly beleeue to liue in the body at this present houre with-out hauing euer tasted of death Hee was taken vp by a fiery chariot body and soule from this mortall world as the scriptures plainly auouch Therefore when he commeth to giue the law a spirituall exposition which the Iewes doe now vnderstand wholy in a carnall sence Then shall hee turne the hearts of the fathers vnto the children or the heart of the father vnto the child for the LXX doe often vse the singular number for the plurall that is the Iewes shall then vnderstand the law as their holy forefathers had done before them Moyses the Prophets and the rest For the vnderstanding of the fathers being brought to the vnderstanding of the children is the turning of the fathers heart vnto the children and the childrens consent vnto the vnderstanding of the fathers is the turning of their heart vnto the fathers And whereas the LXX say c And the heart of a man vnto his kinsman fathers and children are the nearest of kindred and consequently are meant of in this place There may be a farther and more choice interpretation of this place namely that Helias should turne the heart of the father vnto the childe not by making the father to loue the child but by teaching that the father loueth him that the Iewes who had hated him before may hence-forth loue him also For they hold that God hateth him now because they hold him to be neither God nor the Sonne of God but then shall his heart in their iudgements be turned vnto him when they are so farre turned them-selues as to vnderstand how he loueth him The sequell And the heart of man vnto his kinsman meaneth the heart of man vnto the man Christ for hee being one God in the forme of God taking the forme of a seruant and becomming man vouchsafed to become our kinsman This then shall Heliah performe Least I come and smite the earth with cursing The earth that is those carnall thoughted Iewes that now are and that now murmure at the Deity saying that he delighted in the wicked and that it is in vaine to serue him L. VIVES HEliah a the Of him read the King 1. 2. The Iewes out of this place of Malachi beleeue that hee shall come againe before the Messiah as the Apostles doe shew in their question concerning his comming Matt. 17. to which our Sauiour in answering that he is come already doth not reproue the Scribes opinion but sheweth another cōming of Heliah before himelfe which the Scribes did not vnderstand Origen for first he had said that Helias must first come and restore all things But it being generally held that Helias should come before Christ and it being vnknowne before which comming of Christ our Sauiour to cleare the doubt that might arise of his deity in that the people did not see that Helias was come said Helias is come already meaning Iohn of whome hee him-selfe had sayd If yee will receiue it this is Helias As if he had said bee not moued in that you thinke you saw not Helias before me whome you doubt whether I be the Messias or no. No man can be deceiued in the beleeuing that Iohn who came before me was that Helias who was to come not that his soule was in Iohn or that Helias himselfe in person were come but in that Iohn came in the spirit and power of Helias to turne the hearts of the fathers vnto the children to make the vnbeleeuers righteous and to prepare me a perfect people as the Angel promised of him Luc. 1. 17 This great mistery the Lord being willing to poynt at and yet not laying it fully open hee eleuates the hearts of the audience with his vsuall phrase vpon such occasions Hee that hath eares to heare let him heare And truely Iohns life came very neare Helias his Both liued in the wildernesse both wore girdles of skins both reproued vicious Princes and were persecuted by them both preached the comming of Christ fittly therefore might Iohn bee called another Helias to forerunne Christs first comming as Helias him-selfe shall do the second c. b Conuert the Iewes Therefore said Christ Helias must first come c. to correct saith Chrisostome their infidelity and to turne the hearts of the fathers vnto the children that is vnto the Apostles And then hee maketh a question If Helias his comming shall do so much good why did not our Sauiour send him before his first comming Answ. because as then they held our Sauiour himselfe to be Helias and yet would not beleeue him wheras when at the worlds end Helias shall come after all their tedious expectation and shew them who was the true Messias then will they all beleeue him c And the heart of man Hierome and our English vulgar read it other-wise That it is not euident in the Old-Testament in such places as say God shall iudge that it shal be in the person of Christ but onely by some of the testimonies where the Lord God speakes CHAP. 30. TO gather the whole number of such places of Scripture as prophecy this iudgement were too tedious Sufficeth we haue proued it out of both the Testaments But the places of the Old-Testament are not so euident for the comming of Christ a in person as them of the New be for whereas we read in the Old that the Lord God shall come it is no consequent that it is meant of Christ for the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost are all both Lord and God which we may not omit to obserue Wee must therefore first of all make a demonstration of those places in the prophets as do expressely name the Lord God and yet herein are euidently meant of Iesus Christ as also of those wherein this euidence is not so plaine and yet may bee conueniently vnderstood of him neuerthelesse There is one place in Isaias that hath it as plaine as may be Here me O Iacob and Israel saith the said Prophet my called I am I am the first and I am the last surely my hand hath laid the foundation of the earth and my right hand hath spanned the Heauens when I call them they stand together All you assemble your selues and heare which amongst
nor must we at all beleeue what Apuleius would haue vs and others with him that the Daemones are so placed betweene the gods and men that they beare vp mens prayers and bring downe the gods helpes but that they are spirits most thirstie of mischiefe wholy vniust proud enuious treacherous a inhabiting the ayre in deed as thrust out of the glorious heauen for their vnpardonable guilt and condemned eternally to that prison Nor are they aboue man in merite because ayre is aboue earth for men doe easily excell them not in quality of body but in the faith and fauour of the true God Indeed they rule ouer many that are not worthy of the perticipation of gods truth such are their subiects wonne to them by false myracles and by illusions perswading them that they are gods But others that looked more narrowly into them and their qualities would not beleeue this that they were gods onely they gott this place in their opinion to be held the gods messengers and bringers of mens good fortunes Yet those that held them not gods would not giue them the honor of gods because they saw them euill and held all gods to be good yet durst they not denie them all diuine honors for feare of offending the people whose inueterate superstition preserued them in so many temples altars and sacrifices L. VIVES INhabiting a the ayre The olde writers placed all their fable of hell in the ayre and there was 〈◊〉 Proserpina the Man●…s and the Furies Capella Chalc●… saith the ayre was iustly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 darke Peter also and Iude affirme that the deuills 〈◊〉 bound in darknesse in the ayre some in the lowest parts of the earth Empedocles in Pl●… 〈◊〉 faith that Heauen reiected them earth expels them the sea cannot abide them thus are they ●…ed by being tossed from place to place Hermes Trismegistus his opinion of Idolatrie and how he might come to know that the Egiptian superstitions were to be abrogated CHAP. 23. FOr Hermes a the Aegiptian called Trismegistus wrote contrary to these A●… indeed holds them no gods but middle agents betweene gods and men that being so necessary he conioynes their adoration with the diuine worship But Trismegistus saith that the high God made some gods and men other some These words as I write them may bee vnderstood of Images because they are the workes of men But he calleth visible and palpable bodies the bodyes of the gods wherein are spirits inuited in thereto that haue power to hurt or pleasure such as giue them diuine honors So then to combine such a spirit inuisible by arts vnto a visible image of some certaine substance which it must vse as the soule doth the body this is to make a god saith hee and this wonderfull power of making gods is in the hands of man His b words are these And whereas 〈◊〉 discourse saith he concernes the affinitie betweene gods and men marke Asclepius this power of man Our God the Lord and Father is the creator of the celestiall gods so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the terrestriall which are in the temples And a little after So doth humanity remember the originall and euer striueth to imitate the deity making gods like the o●…ne Image as God the father hath done like his Do you meane statues replied Asclepius statues quoth he doe you not see them animate full of spirits and sence d trust your eyes doing such wonders see you not statues that presage future euents farre perhaps e beyond all propheticall inspiration to fore-tell that cure diseases and c●…se them giuing men mirth or sadnesse as they deserue Know you not Asclepius th●…t Eg●…pt 〈◊〉 heauens Image or rather the place whereinto all the celestiall graces des●…end the very temple of the whole world And since wisdome should fore-know all I 〈◊〉 not haue you ignorant herein The time shall come that all the zeale of Egipt shall be ●…gated and all the religious obseruations held idle and vaine Then goeth hee forward prophecying by all likelyhood of christianity whose true sanctitie is the ●…tter subuersion of all fictions and superstitions that the Sauiours true grace might free vs from those humaine gods those handy-workes of man and place vs to gods seruice mans maker But Hermes presageth these things as the deuills confederate suppressing the euidence of the Christian name and yet fore-telling with a sorrowfull intimation that from it should proceed the wracke of all their Idolatrous superstitions for Hermes was one of those who as the Apostle saith K●…ing GOD glorified him not as GOD nor were thankfull but became vaine in their imaginations and their foolish heart was full of darkenesse when they professed them-selues wise they became fooles For they turned the glory of the incorruptible God into the symilitude of the Image of a corruptible man and byrdes and foore-footed beasts and Serpents f For this Hermes saith much of God according to truth But how blindnesse of heart drawes him to affirme this I know not that these gods should bee alwayes subiect whome man hath made and yet to bewaile their abrogations to come As if man could bee more miserable any way then in liuing slaue to his owne handy-worke g it being easier for him to put off all humanitie in adoring these peeces hee hath made then for them to put on deity by being made by him For it comes oftene●… to passe that a man being set in honor be not vnderstood to bee like to the beasts then that his handy-worke should bee preferred before the worke that God made like his owne Image to wit mans selfe Worthily then doth hee fall from his grace that made him that maketh that his Lord which he hath made himselfe Those vaine deceitfull pernicious sacriledges Hermes foreseeing should perish deploreth but as impudently as hee had knowne it foolishly For the spirit of GOD had not spoken to him as it did to the Prophets that spoke this with gladnesse If a man make gods behold they are no gods and in another place At that day saith the LORD I will take the names of their Idols from the earth and there shal be no remembrance thereof And to the purpose of Egipt heare Isaias The Idols of Egipt shal be mooued at his presence and the heart of Egipt shall melt in the midst of her and so forward Such were they also that reioyced for the fulfilling h of that which they knew should come to passe as Simeon Anna and Elizabeth the first knowing Christ at his birth the second at his conception and i Peter that by Gods inspiration sayd Thou art that Christ the Sonne of the liuing GOD. But Hermes had his knowledge from those deuills that trembling in the flesh sayd to Christ Why art thou come to vndoe vs before the time Either k because that came suddenly vpon them which they expected not vntill afterwards or that they called it their vndoing to bee knowne and so despised and this was
before the time that is the iudgement wherein they and all men their sectaries are to bee cast into eternall torments as that l truth saith that neither deceiueth nor is deceiued not as hee saith that following the puffes of Philosophy flies here and there mixing truth and falshood greeuing at the ouerthrow of that religion which afterwards hee affirmes is all error L. VIVES HErmes a Of him by and by b His words We haue seene of his bookes greeke and latine This is out of his Asclepius translated by Apuleius c So doth humanity So humanity adapting it selfe to the nature and originall saith Hermes his booke d Trust So hath Hermes it Bruges copy hath Mistrust not your selfe e Beyond Apuleius and the Cole●…ne copy haue it both in this maner onely Mirth the Coleynists haue more then he f For Hermes I would haue cited some of his places but his bookes are common and so it is needelesse 〈◊〉 It being easier A diuersity of reading but of no moment nor alteration of sence h Of that which Reioycing that Christ is come whom the law and Prophets had promised So Iohn bad his disciples aske art thou he that should come or shall wee looke for an other i Peter This confession is the Churches corner stone neuer decaying to beleeue and affirme THAT IESVS IS CHRIST THE SONNE OF THE LIVING GOD. This is no Philosophicall reuelation no inuention no quirke no worldly wisdome but reuealed by GOD the father of all to such as hee doth loue and vouchsafe it k Because Hee sheweth why the deuills thought that Christ vndid them before the time l Truth Mat. 25. 41. Depart from me●… yee cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the deuill and his angells How Hermes openly confessed his progenitors error and yet bewayled the destruction of it CHAP. 24. FOr after much discourse hee comes againe to speake of the gods men made but of these sufficient saith hee let vs returne againe to man to reason by which diuine guift man hath the name of reasonable For we haue yet spoken no wonderfull thing of man the a wonder of all wonders is that man could fi●…e out the diuine nature and giue it effect Wherefore our fathers erring exceedinly in incredulity b concerning the deities and neuer penetrating into the depth of diuine religiō they inuēted an art to make gods whervnto they ioyned a vertue out of some part of the worlds nature like to the other and conioyning these two because they could make no soules they framed certaine Images whereinto they called either Angells or deuills and so by these mysteries gaue these Idols power to hurt or helpe them I know not whether the deuills being admited would say asmuch as this man saith Our fathers exceedingly erring saith he in incredulity concerning the deities not penetrating into the depth of diuine religion inuented an arte to make gods Was hee content to say they but erred in this inuention no he addeth Exceedingly thus this exceeding error and incredulity of those that looked not into matters diuine gaue life to this inuention of making gods And yet though it were so though this was but an inuention of error incredulity and irreligiousnes yet this wise man lamenteth that future times should abolish it Marke now whether Gods power compell him to confesse his progenitors error the diuills to bee made the future wrack of the said error If it were their exceeding error incredulity negligence in matters diuine that giue first life to this god-making inuention what wonder if this arte bee detestable and all that it did against the truth cast out from the truth this truth correcting that errour this faith that incredulity this conuersion that neglect If he conceale the cause and yet confesse that rite to be their inuention we if we haue any wit cannot but gather that had they bin in the right way they would neuer haue fallen to that folly had they either thought worthily or meditated seriously of religion yet should wee a ffirme that their great incredulous contemptuous error in the cause of diuinity was the cause of this inuention wee should neuerthelesse stand in need to prepare our selues to endure the impudence of the truths obstinate opponēts But since he that admires y● power of this art aboue all other things in man and greeues that the time should come wherein al those illusions should claspe with ruine through the power of legall authority since he confesseth the causes that gaue this art first original namely the exceeding error incredulity negligēce of his ancestor in matters diuine what should wee doe but thinke GOD hath ouerthrowne these institutions by their iust contrary causes that which errors multitude ordained hath truths tract abolished faith hath subuerted the worke of incredulity and conuersion vnto Gods truth hath suppressed the effects of true Gods neglect not in Egipt only where onely the diabolicall spirit bewaileth but in all the world which heareth a new song sung vnto the Lord as the holy scripture saith Sing vnto the Lord a new song Sing vnto the Lord all the earth for the c title of this Psalme is when the house was built after the captiuity the City of God the Lords house is built that is the holy Church all the earth ouer after captiuity wherein the deuills held those men slaues who after by their faith in God became principall stones in the building for mans making of these gods did not acquit him from beeing slaue to these works of his but by his willing worship he was drawn into their society a society of suttle diuills not of stupid Idols for what are Idols but as the Scripture saith haue eyes and see not all the other properties that may be said of a dead sencelesse Image how well soeuer carued But the vncleane spirits therein by that truly black art boūd their soules that adored thē in their society most horrid captiuity therefore saith the Apostle We know that an Idol is nothing in the world But the Gentiles offer to deuilis not vnto God I wil not haue them to haue society with the deuils So then after this captiuity that bound men slaue to the deuils Gods house began to be built through the earth thence had the Psalme the beginning Sing vnto the Lord a new song sing vnto the Lord all the earth Sing vnto the Lord and praise his name d declare his saluation e from day to day Declare his glorie amongst all nations and his wonders amongst all people For the Lord is great and much to be praised hee is to be feared aboue all gods For all the gods of the people are Idols but the Lord made the heauens Hee then that bewailed the abolishment of these Idols in the time to come and of the slauery wherein the deuills held men captiue did it out of an euill spirits inspiration and from that did desire the continuance of that captiuity
haire of their head they desire and waite for the resurrection of their bodies wherein they suffred such paines and are neuer to suffer more b For if they hated not their flesh when they were faine to bind it from rebelling by the law of the spirit how much shall they loue it becomming wholy spirituall for if wee may iustly call the spirit seruing the flesh carnall then so may we call the flesh seruing the spirit spirituall c not because it shal be turned into the spirit as some thinke because it is written It is sowne a naturall bodie but it aris●…th a spirituall bodie but because it shall serue the spirit in all wonderfull and ready obeisance to the fulfilling of most secure will of indissolluble immortality all sence of trouble heauynesse and corruptibility beeing quike taken from it For it shall not bee so bad as it is now in our best health nor as it was in our first pa●…ts before sinne for they though they had not dyed but that they sinned 〈◊〉 ●…aine to eate corporal meate as men do now hauing earthly and not spiritual bodies and though they should neuer haue growne old and so haue died the 〈◊〉 of life that stood in the midst of Paradise vnlawfull for them to tast of affording them this estate by GODS wonderfull grace yet they eate of more 〈◊〉 then that one which was forbidden them because it was bad but 〈◊〉 their instruction in pure and simple obedience which is a great vertue in a ●…ble creature placed vnder God the creator for though a man touched no 〈◊〉 ●…et in touching that which was forbidden him the very act was the sinne 〈◊〉 obedence they liued therefore of other fruites and eate least their carnall 〈◊〉 should haue beene troubled by hunger or thirst but the tast of the tree 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was giuen them to confirme them against death and weakenesse by age 〈◊〉 rest seruing them for nutriment and this one for a sacrament the tree of life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 earthly paradise being as the wisdome of God is in the heauenly whereof 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…itten It is a tree of life to them that imbrace it L. VIVES VN●… them a That Luc. 21. 7. b For if Ephes. 5. 29 no man euer yet hated his owne flesh c Not because Saint Origen faith that all our corporall nature shall become spirituall and all 〈◊〉 ●…ance shal become a body purer and clearer then the light and such an one as man can●…●…ine God shall be all in all so that euery creature shall be transmuted into that which 〈◊〉 then all namely into the diuine substance for that is the best Periarch Of the Paridise wherein our first parents were placed and that it may be taken spiritually also without any wrong to the truth of the history as touching the reall place CHAP. 21. WHerevpon some referred that a Paradise wherein the first man was placed as the scripture recordeth al vnto a spiritual meaning taking the trees to 〈◊〉 ●…es as if there were b no such visible things but onely that they were 〈◊〉 signifie things intelligible As if there were not a reall Paradise because 〈◊〉 vnderstand a spiritual one as if there were not two such women as Agar 〈◊〉 and two sonnes of Abraham by them the one being a bond woman and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 free because the Apostle saith that they signified the two Testaments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Rocke gushed not forth in water when Moyses smot it because that 〈◊〉 ●…ay prefigure Christ the same Apostle saying the rocke was Christ No man 〈◊〉 that the Paradise may be vnderstood the blisse of the Saints the c foure 〈◊〉 foure vertues prudence fortitude temperance and iustice the trees all 〈◊〉 ●…sciplines the tree of life wisdome the mother of the rest the tree of the ●…edge of good and euill the triall of transgression for God decreed a pu●…nt for sinne iustly and well if man could haue made vse of it to his owne 〈◊〉 These things may also be vnderstood of the Church and that in a better 〈◊〉 as prophetique tokens of things to come Paradise may be taken for the Church as wee d read in the canticles thereof The foure flouds are the foure Ghospels the frutefull trees the Saints their fruits their workes the tree of life the holy of holies Christ the tree of the knowledge of good and euill free election of will for if man once forsake Gods will he cannot vse him-selfe but to his owne destruction and therefore hee learneth either to adhere vnto the good of all goods or to affect his owne onely for louing himselfe he is giuen to himselfe that being in troubles sorrowes and feares and feeling them withall hee may sing with the Psalmist My soule is cast downe within me and being reformed I will waite vpon thee O God my defence These and such like may be lawfully vnderstood by Paradise taken in a spirituall sence so that the history of the true and locall one be as firmely beleeued L. VIVES PAradise a Augustine super Genes ad lit lib. 8. recites three opinions of Paradice 1. Spirituall onely 2. locall onely third spirituall and locall both and this he approues for the likeliest But where Paradise was is a maine doubt in authors Iosephus placeth it in the east and so doth Bede adding withall that it is a region seuered by seas from all the world and lying so high that it toucheth the moone Plato in his Phaedo placeth it aboue the cloudes which others dissalow as vnlikely Albertus Grotus herein followeth Auicen and the elder writers also as Polibius and Eratosthenes imagining a delicate and most temperate region vnder the equinoctiall gainst the old Position that the climate vnder the equinoctiall was inhabitable The equinoctiall diuides the torrid Zone in two parts touching the Zodiacke in two points Aries and Libra There did hee thinke the most temperate clime hauing twelue howers day and twelue night all the yeare long and there placed hee his Paradise So did Scotus nor doth this controull them that place it in the east for there is cast and west vnder the equinoctiall line Some say that the sword of fire signifieth that burning clymate wherein as Arrianus saith there is such lightning and so many fiery apparitions where Paradise was Hierome thinketh that the Scriptures doth shew and though the Septuagintes translate in Eden from the east Oriens is a large signification Hierome saith thus for Paradise there is Ortus Gan. Eden is also Deliciae pleasures for which Symmachus translateth Paradisus florens That also which followeth Contra Orientem in the Hebrew Mikkedem Aquila translateth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we may read it from the beginning Symmachus hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Theodotion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both which signifie beginning and not the east whereby it is plaine that God had made Paradise before he made heauen and earth as we read also in the Hebrew God had planted the
manifest which are adultery fornication vncleannesse wantonnesse Idolatry Witch-craft hatred debate emulation b wrath contentions seditions heresies enuie drunkennesse gluttonie and such like whereof I tell you now as I told you before that they which do those things shall not inherit the Kingdome of God The due consideration of this place of the Apostle will presently giue vs sufficient demonstration as farre as here needeth what it is to liue according to the flesh for in the workes of the flesh which hee saith are manifest rehearsing and condemning them we finde not onely such as appertaine to bodily and luxurious delight as fornications vncleannesse luxurie and drunkennesse but such also as discouer the viciousnesse of the minde truly distinct from fleshly pleasures For who conceiueth not that Idolatry Witch-craft emnity contention emulation wrath enuy sedition and heresie are rather mentall vices th●…n corporall A man may for very reue●…ence of some Idolatrous or hereticall error abstaine from the lusts of the body and yet though hee doe so by the Apostles wordes hee liues according to the flesh and in auoyding the workes thereof committeth most damnable workes thereof Who hath not enmitie in his heart or who saith to his enemy or him that hee thinkes his enemie you haue an euill flesh against mee none you haue an euill minde against mee Lastly as all men that should heare those carnall vices recited would affirme they were meant of the flesh so none that heareth those mentall crimes but referreth them all to the minde ●…hy then do●…h this true and faithfull teacher of the Gentiles call them The workes of the flesh but in that hee taketh flesh for man as the part for the whole L. VIVES SOme a misconceiuing Those were the Apollinarists Aug●…n Ioan. Serm. in Arriū 83. Q●… The Cerdonians also the Apelli●… held so de har ad quod vult Deū b Wrath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 H●… reades it irae but animus is vsed also for wrath Salust You saw last yeare how wrathfully quantis animis Lucutlus opposed L. Quintius hereof comes the word animositas that Augustine vseth for wrath Uirgil calls them East windes Animosi wrathfull Macrobius in Som. Scip. 2. vseth it so too That anger that the greekes call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is momentarie and of no continuance Tully calls it excandescentia a fury now beginning and presently ceasing there is in this text of Paul ●…ixae scoldings or altercations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Augustine addeth not That sinne came from the soule and not the flesh and that the corruption which sinne hath procured is not sin but the punishment of sinne CHAP. 3. IF any man say that the flesh is cause of the viciousnesse of the soule he is ignorant in mans nature for the corruptible body doth but burden the soule therefore the Apostle speaking of this corruptible body whereof hee had sayd before although our outward man be corrupted we know quoth he that if our earthly house of habitation bee aestroyed wee haue a building giuen of God an house not made with hands but an eternall one in heauen therefore wee sigh desyring to bee cloathed with that habitation which we haue in heauen notwithstanding if we bee cloathed wee shall not bee found naked For wee that are in this habitacle sigh and are burdened because we would not be vncloathed but cloathed vpon that mortality might b●… swallowed vp of life Wee are therefore burdened with this corruptible body and yet knowing that it is not the bodies nature but corruption that causeth this burden wee would not bee despoiled of it but bee cloathed vpon it with the immortality thereof It shall then bee a body still but burden some to vs no more because it is become incorruptible so then as yet the corruptible bodie is heauy vnto the soule and the earthly mansion keepeth down the comprehensiue minde But yet such as thinke that the euills of the minde arise from the body doe erre For though that Virgill doe seeme to expresse a plaine a Platonisme in these verses Igneus est ollis vigor celestis origo Seminibus quamtum non noxia corpo●…a tardant Terrenique hebetant artus moribundaque membra Those seedes haue firy vigor heauenly spring So farre as bodies hinder not with fullnesse Or earthly dying members clog with dullnesse Seeming to deriue the foure knowne passions of the minde b Desire Feare Ioy and Sorrow as the originalls of all guilt wholy from the bodie by these verses following Hinc metuunt cupiuntque dolent gaudentque nec aura●… Suscipiunt clausae tenebris carcere caeco Heare-hence they feare desire displeas'd content Nor looke to heauen in darke-blinde prison pent Yet our faith teacheth vs otherwise For this corruption that is so burdensome to the soule is the punishment of the first sin not the cause●… the corruptible flesh made not the soule to sin but the sinning soule made the flesh corruptible frō which corruption although there do arise some incitements vnto sin some vicious desires yet are not all the sins of an euill life to bee laid vpon the flesh otherwise we shal make the diuil that hath no flesh sin-lesse for though we cannot c cal him a fornicator a drunkard or by any one of those carnally vicious names though he bee a secret prouoker of man vnto all those yet is he truely s●… most proude and enuious which vices haue possessed him so farre as therefore is hee destinate vnto eternall torment in the prisons of this obscure ayre Now those vices that domineere in him the Apostle calleth the workes of the flesh though sure it is that hee hath no flesh For hee saith that emnity contention emulation wrath and enuie are the workes of the flesh to all which pride giueth being yet rules pride in the flesh-lesse deuill For who hates the Saints more then hee who is more enuious contentious emulating and wrathfull against them then hee Doing all this without the flesh how are these the workes of the flesh but because they are the workes of man whom as I sayd before the Apostle meaneth by flesh for man became like the deuill not in beeing in the flesh for so was not the deuill but in liuing according to his owne lust that is according to the fleshly man for so chose the deuill to doe when hee left the truth to become a lier not through GOD but through himselfe who is both a lier and the father of lying For hee lied first and from him sinning and lying had their beginning L. VIVES PLaine a Platonisme No more then Pythagorisme both alike but of this in the 8. booke b Desire There are foure chiefe affects of the minde two delightfull and two sorrowfull Of the first the one belongs to things present ioy and is an opinion of a present good the other desire vnto future and is an opinion of a future good Of the two sad
ones sorrow is an opinion of a present euill and feare of a future and of these affects come all the rest Enuy Emulation Detraction Pitty Vexation Mourning Sadnesse Lamentation Care Doubt Troublesomnesse Affliction Desperation all these come of sorrow and Sloath Shame Error Timorousnesse Amazement Disturbance and Anxiety from feare And then Exultation Delight and Boasting of Ioy with Wrath Fury Hatred Emnity Discorde Need and Affectation all of Desire Cic. Tusc. quest lib. 4. c Cannot call him Of this hereafter What it is to liue according to Man and to liue according to God CHAP. 4. THerefore a man liuing according to man and not according to God is like the deuill because an Angell indeed should not liue according to an Angel but according to God to remaine in the truth and speake truth from him and not lies from himselfe For the Apostle speakes thus of man If the truth of GOD hath abounded through my lying calling lying his the truth of God Therefore he that liues according to the truth liues according vnto God not according to himself For God said I am the truth But he y● liueth not so but according to himself liueth according to lying not that man whom God that neuer createdlie did create is the author of lying but because man was created vpright to liue according to his creator and not himselfe that is to doe his will rather then his owne But not to liue as hee was made to liue this is a lie For hee a would bee blessed and yet will not liue in a course possible to attaine it b What can there bee more lying then such a will And therefore it is not vnfitly sayd euery sinne is a lie For wee neuer sinne but with a will to doe our selues good or no●… to doe our selues hurt Therefore is it a lie when as that we thinke shall doe vs good turnes vnto our hurt or that which we thinke to better our selues by makes vs worse whence is this but because that man can haue his good but onely from God whome hee forsaketh in sinning and none from himselfe in liuing according to whom hee sinneth Whereas therefore wee sayd that the contrariety of the two citties arose herevpon because some liued according to the flesh and others according to the spirit we may likewise say it is because some liue according vnto Man and other some vnto God For Paul saith plainely to the Corinthians Seeing there is emulation and contention amongst you are you not carnall and walke accord●…ng to man To walke therefore according to man is carnall man beeing vnderstood in his inferior part flesh For those which hee calles carnall here he calleth naturall before saying c What man knoweth the things of a man but the spirit of a man which is in him euen so no man knoweth the things of God but the Spirit of God Now we haue not receiued the spirit of the Word but the Spirit which is of God that wee might know the things that God hath giuen vs which things also we speake not in the words which mans wisdome teacheth but d being taught by the spirit comparing spiri●…ll things with spirituall things But the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the spirit of God e for they are foolishnesse vnto him Vnto those naturall men hee spake this a little afterwards I could not speake vnto you brethren as vnto spirituall men but as vnto carnall And here is that figure in speech that vseth the part for the whole to bee vnderstood for the whole man may either bee ment by the soule or by the flesh both which are his parts and so a naturall man and a carnall man are not seuerall but all one namely one that liueth according to man according as those places afore-cited doe intend By the workes of the lavv f shall no flesh bee iustified and that where it is said that g Seuenty fiue soules v●…ent dovvne vvith Iacob into Egipt in the former by flesh is ment man and in the later by 75. soules are meant 75. persons And in this not in the words which mans wisdome teacheth he might haue sayd which carnall wisdome teacheth as also according to the flesh for according vnto man if hee had pleased And it was more apparant in the subsequence for when one saith I am Pauls and another I am Apollo's are you not men That which he had called naturall and carnall before he now more expressly calleth man meaning you liue according to Man and not according to God whom if you followed in your liues you should bee made gods of men L. VIVES HEE a would No man liueth so wickedly but hee desireth beatitude though his course lead him quite another way directly vnto misery b What can There is nothing more deceiptfull then the wicked For it deludeth him extreamely in whom it ruleth c What man This place is cited otherwise more expresly in the latine text of the first booke d Taught by the sp●…it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. But some reade by the Doctrine of the spirit e For they are The spirituall things of GOD seeme fooleries vnto carnall and vnsettled men as the Pagans ●…dome and vertues were scorned of the ritch gnoffes that held shades for substances and vertues for meere vanities Thence hath Plato his caue wherein men were vsed to shapes ●…d appearing shadowes that they thought their had beene no other bodies Derep. lib. 7. f shall no flesh Some read it in the present tense but erroneously the greeke is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abitur g Seuenty fiue soules Soule for man is an Hebraicall phrase for life a greeke phrase vsed also by the latine Nonius Marcellus saith Uirgil vseth it for bodies there where he saith Intereasocios inhumataque corpora terrae Mandemus qui solus honos Acheronte sub imo est Ite ait egregias animas quae sanguine nobis Hanc patriam peperere suo Meane while th' vnburied bodies of our mates Giue we to Graue sole honor after Fates Goe honor those braue soules with their last dues Who with their blood purchas'd this land for vs. Whether it be so or no let him looke to it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indeed in the Greeke is sometimes vsed for the whole creature That the Platonists teach the natures of soule and body better then the Manichees yet they erre in ascribing sinne vnto the nature of the flesh CHAP. 5. WE should not therfore iniure our creator in imputing our vices to our flesh the flesh is good but to leaue the creator and liue according to this created good is the mischiefe whether a man do choose to liue according to the body or the soule or both which make full man who therfore may be called by either of them For he that maketh the soules nature the greatest good and the bodies the greatest euill doth both carnally affect the soule and carnally auoid the flesh conceiuing of
daies and euery fourth yeare inter●… a day into the Calends of March which was called Bissextile because the sixth of the ●…ds of March was twise set downe in such yeares for the better adapting of these to the 〈◊〉 ●…e made a yeare of fifteene monthes interposing two monthes betweene No●…mber and ●…ber with the intercalary month for that yeare and this was to bring the month ●…nd 〈◊〉 to the course of the Sun for the accounts made by winter and sommer they called the 〈◊〉 of confusion for it contained 443. daies c Pliny Lib. 7. cap. 48. Whether we ought to follow the Hebrew computation or the Septuagints CHAP. 13. BVT if I say thus or thus presently I must bee answered it is one of the Iewes lies of which before for it is incredible that such a laudable and honorable fathers as the Septuagints were would record an vntruth Now if I should aske them whether it be likely that a nation so large and so farre dispersed as the Iewes should all lay their heads together to forge this lie and through their malice others credites subuert their owne truthes or that the seauenty beeing Iewes also and all shut vp in one place for Ptolomy had gotten them together for that purpose should enuy that the gentiles should enioy their scriptures and put in those errors by a common consent who seeth not which is easier to effect But b God forbid that any wise man should thinke that the Iewes how froward soeuer could haue such power or so many and so farre dispersed bookes or that the seauenty had any such common intent to conceale their histories truth from the Gentiles One might easier beleeue that the error was committed in the transcription of the copy from Ptolomies library and so that it had a successiue propagation through all the copies dispersed This may welbe suspected indeed in Mathusalems life and in that other where there is foure and twenty yeares difference in the whole-sum But in those where the falt is continued so that an hundered yeares in the one are still ouerplus before the generations and wanting after it and in the other still wanting before and ouerplus after still agreeing in the maine and this continued through the first second third fourth fifth and seauenth generation this professeth a constancy in error and intimateth rather industrious endeuour to make it so then any negligent omission to let it passe so So that this disparity in the greeke and latine from the hebrew where these yeares are first wanting and then added to procure the consent of both is neither to be said the Iewes malice not the Septuagints diligence but vpon the transcribers error that copied it first from Ptolomies library for vnto this very daie numbers where they are either hard to bee vnderstood or seeme to denote a thing not very needfull they are negligently transcribed and more negligently corrected for thinketh he that he need learne how many thousand there was in euery Tribe of Israell it is held vselesse how few is there that can discerne what vse to make hereof But here where in all these generations here wants an hundred yeares and heere is an hundred too many wanting afterward when they exceeded before the birth of such or such a sonne and exceeding afterwards when they wanted before he that did this desiring to pers●…ade vs that the fathers were to liue so long because the yeares were so short and desyring to shew that by their maturity when they were fit to generate and hereby thinking to perswade the incredulous that a hundred of those yeares were but ten of ours this made him where he found an age which his account would disable for generation to adde an hundred yeares and after the generation was past to take it from the maine summe of his daies of life For thus desired hee to proue these ages co●…nient for generation by his account and yet not to diminish from the true computation of their whole yeares Which because hee did not in the sixth generation this is that that perswades vs the rather to thinke that he did it where it needed because where it needeth not hee addeth not not altereth any thing For there in the hebrew he found that Iared liued a hundred sixty and two yeares before hee begot Henoch which time comes to sixteene yeares two monthes and some od daies by his account and that age is fit for generation and therefore hee would not adde an hundred here to make them vp twenty six of our yeares by his reckning nor would hee detract any thing from the time of Iared after 〈◊〉 birth This was that made the summes of both bookes agree Another perswasion is c because in the eight generation before that Mathusalem had begot Lamech the Hebrews reading one hundred eightie two our bookes haue twenty yeares lesse where-as ordinarily wee vse to finde a hundred more and after Lamech his birth they are added againe to make vp the summe which is one in both the bookes For if he would take a hundred and ●…ie yeares to be seauenteene because of the abilitie to gette children hee should neither haue added nor subtracted any thing from thence for hee found a time full inough here for want of which hee was faine to adde a hundred yeares ●…where Wherefore wee should verily thinke that this error of the twenty yeares were occasioned by some fault in transcription but that the summe of 10 is added to the grand-summe againe to make both bookes agree Shall wee thinke it was subtletie in him to couer his addition and subtraction of those yeares when need was by practising it also not with hundreds but with lesse summes where he needed not whether we thinke it was thus or no or that the right is this or that I make no question the rightest course of all in all those controuersies concerning computations if the two bookes differ seeing both cannot bee true yet d beleeue the originall rather then the translation For some of the Greeke copies besides a Latine one and a Syrian one affirme that Mathusalem died sixe yeares before the deluge L. VIVES LAudable a and A diuersitie of reading but of no moment b God forbid Thus may we answere those that say the Iewes haue corrupted the old Testament and the Greekes the new least we should go to drinke at truths spring-head c Because in the I conceiue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 meaning here Hierom and the seauentie read both that Mathusalem was a hundred eightie and seauen when hee begot Lamech vnlesse Augustine had read it otherwise in some other d Beleeue This Hierom admireth and reason inuiteth vs to●… no man of wit will gainesay it but in vaine doe good iudgements defend this for blockishnesse lyes against it like a rock not that they onely are ignorant in those tongues for Augustine had no Hebrew and very little Greeke but they want his modesty hee would euer learne and they would neuer learne but would teach that
actiue The Greekes indeede 〈◊〉 it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wilt thou bee turned away b From the bonds The bonds of hell say 〈◊〉 ●…kes making this earth an hell vnto Christ beeing descended from heauen but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reading is better Another verse of the former Psalme and the persons to whome it belongeth CHAP. 12. THE residue of this Psalme in these wordes Lord where are thy olde mercies which thou sworest vnto Dauid in thy truth Lord remember the 〈◊〉 of thy seruants by many nations that haue scorned them because they 〈◊〉 ●…oached the foote-steps of thine annointed whether it haue reference 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Israelites that expected this promise made vnto Dauid or to the spiri●…●…sraelites the Christians it is a question worth deciding This was written or spoaken in the time of Ethan whose name the title of the Psalme beareth which was also in Dauids reigne so that these words Lord where are thine old mercies which thou swarest vnto Dauid in thy truth could not then bee spoaken but that the Prophet bare a type of some-what long after to ensue to wit at such time as the time of Dauid wherein those mercies were promised might seeme ancient It may further bee vnderstood b because that many nations that persecuted the Christians cast them in the teeth with the passion of Christ which hee calleth his change to witte beeing made immortall by death Christs change also in this respect may bee a reproach vnto the Israelites because they expected him and the nations onely receiued him and this the beleeuers of the New Testament reproche them for who continue in the Olde so that the Prophet may say Lord remember the reproache of thy seruants because heere-after GOD not forgetting to pitty them they shall beleeue also But I like the former meaning better for the words LORD remember the reproach of thy seruants c. cannot bee sayd of the enemies of CHRIST to whome it is a reproche that CHRIST left them and came to the nations Such Iewes are no seruants of GOD but of them onely who hauing endured great persecutions for the name of CHRIST can remember that high kingdome promised vnto Dauids seede and say in desire thereof knocking seeking and asking Where are thine olde mercies Lord which thou swaredst vnto thy seruant Dauid Lord remember c. because thine enemies haue held thy change a destruction and vpbraided it in thine annointed And what is Lord remember but Lord haue mercy and for my pacience giue mee that height which thou swarest vnto Dauid in thy truth If wee make the Iewes speake this it must bee those seruants of GOD that suffered the captiuity in Babilon before CHRISTS comming and knew what the change of CHRIST was and that there was no earthly nor transitory felicitie to bee expected by it such as Salomon had for a few yeares but that eternall and spirituall kingdome which the Infidell nations not apprehending as then cast the change of the annointed in their dishes but vnknowinglie and vnto those that knew it And therefore that last verse of the Psalme Blessed bee the Lord for euer-more Amen Amen agreeth fitly inough with the people of the celestiall Hierusalem place them as you please hidden in the Old Testament before the reuelation of the New or manifested in the New when it was fully reuealed For GODS blessing vpon the seede of Dauid is not to bee expected onely for a while as Salomon had it but for euer and therefore followeth Amen Amen The hope confirmed the worde is doubled This Dauid vnderstanding in the second of the Kings whence wee digressed in this Psalme saith Thou hast spoken of thy seruants house for a great while And then a little after Now therefore begin blesse the house of thy seruant for euer c. because then hee was to beget a sonne by whome his progenie should descend vnto Christ in whome his house and the house of God should bee one and that eternall It is Dauids house because of Dauids seede and the same is Gods house because of his Temple built of soules and not of stones wherein Gods people may dwell for euer in with him and he for euer in and with them he filling them and they being full of him God being all in all their reward in peace and their fortitude in warre And whereas Nathan had said before thus saith the Lord shalt thou beuild me an house now Dauid saith vpon that thou O Lord of hostes the God of Israel hast reuealed vnto thy seruant saying I will build thee an house This house do wee build by liuing well and the Lord by giuing vs power to liue well for vnlesse the Lord build the house their labour is 〈◊〉 lost that build it And at the last dedication of this house shall the word of the Lord bee fulfilled that Nathan spoke saying I will appoynt a place for my people Israel and will plant it and it shall dwell by it selfe and be no more moued nor shall the 〈◊〉 people trouble it any more as it hath done since the time that I appoynted Iudge●… 〈◊〉 ●…y people Israel L. VIVES THe time of a Ethan Ethan and Asaph were players vpon the brazen Cymballs before the Arke in Dauids time 1. Chronicles 15. the Greeke and the Latine call Ethan an Israe●… but I thinke he was rather an Iezraelite of the towne of Iezrael in the tribe of Iudah and the borders of Isacher betweene Scythopolis and the Legion or an Ezraite of Ezran in the trib●… of Assur Howsoeuer he was Hierome out of the Hebrew calleth him an Ezrait But 〈◊〉 question he was not called an Israelite for no man hath any such peculiar name from his generall nation b Because that many There is a diuersity of reading in some other bookes but not so good as this we follow Whether the truth of the promised peace may be ascribed vnto Salomons time CHAP. 13. HE that looketh for this great good in this world is far wrong Can any one ●…nd the fulfilling of it vnto Salomons time No no the scriptures com●… it exellently as the figure of a future good But this one place the wicked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trouble it any more dissolueth this suspicion fully adding this further 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 done since the time that I appoynted Iudges ouer my people Israel for the 〈◊〉 began to rule Israel before the Kings as soone as euer they had attayned 〈◊〉 ●…d of promise and the wicked that is the enemy troubled them sore and 〈◊〉 was the chance of warre yet had they longer peace in those times then 〈◊〉 ●…ey had in Salomons who raigned but fourty yeares ●…or vnder Iudge Aod 〈◊〉 ●…d eighty yeares peace Salomons time therefore cannot bee held the fulfil●… of those promises and much lesse any Kings besides his for no King had ●…ce that hee had nor any nation euer had kingdome wholly acquit from 〈◊〉 of foe because the mutability of humane estate can neuer grant any 〈◊〉 an
and thirtith of his reigne began Azarias or Ozias to reigne in Iuda Euseb. Eutropius differs not much from this so that by both accounts Ezechias his time fell to the beginning of Numa his reigne h But for the For these prophets prophecyed of the calling of the Heathens as he will shew afterwards Prophecies concerning the Ghospell in Osee and Amos. CHAP. 28. OSee is a Prophet as diuine as deepe Let vs performe our promise and see what hee ●…ayth In the place where it was sayd vnto them you are not my people it sh●…ll bee sayd ye are sonnes of the liuing God This testimony the a Apostles ●…m-selues interpreted of the calling of the Gentiles who because they are th●… spirituall sonnes of Abraham and therfore b rightly called Israell it followeth of them thus Then the children of Iudah and the children of Israell shall bee gathered together and appoint them-selues one head and they shall come vp out of the land If wee seeke for farther exposition of this wee shall ●…loy the sweete taste of the Prophets eloquence Remember but the corner stone and the two wals the Iewes and the Gentiles eyther of them vnder those seuerall names beeing founded vppon that one head and acknowledged to mount vppe from the land And that those carnall Israelites that beleeue not now shall once beleeue being as sonnes to the other succeeding them in their places the same Prophet auouche●…h saying The children of Israell shall sit many dayes without a King without a Prince without an offering without an Altar without a Priesthood and without c manifestations who sees not that these are the Iewes Now marke the sequele Afterwards shall the children of Israell conuert and seeke the Lord their God and Dauid their King and shall feare the Lord and his goodnesse in these later dayes Nothing can be playner spoken here is Christ meant by Dauid as he was the son of Dauid in the flesh sayth the Apostle Nay this Prophet fore-told the third day of his resurrection also Heare him else After two dayes will he reuiue vs and in the third day he will rayse vs vp Iust in this key spake Saint Paul saying If ye bee risen with Christ seeke the thinges which are aboue Such a prophecy hath Amos also Prepare to meete thy God O Israell for lo I forme the thunder and the windes and declare mine annoynted in men and in another place d In that day will I raise vp the tabernacle of Dauid that is falne downe and close vp the breaches thereof and will raise vppe his ruines and build it as in the daies of old that the residue of mankind and a●… the heat●… ●…ay seek me because my name is called vpon them saith the Lord that doth this L. VIVES TH●… a Apostles Pet. 1. 2. 10. b Rightly called Israell For all that follow truth and righteousnesse are of Abrahams spirituall seed Wherfore such as descend from him in the flesh the scriptures call Iudah because that tribe stucke to the old Priesthood temple and sacrifices and such as are not Abrahams children by birth but by faith are called Israell For the tenne tribes that fell from Iu●…ahs King the Iewes named Israell and they differed not much from 〈◊〉 for they left their fathers religion and became Idolaters Wherfore the Iewes hated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much as they did the 〈◊〉 who had no clayme at all of descent from Abrah●… c Manifestations So doe the seauenty read it The hebrew hath it Ephod The seauenty 〈◊〉 at that intimation of the losse of their prophecy doctrine and wisdome the greatest losse 〈◊〉 could befall a citty The hebrew at the abolition of their priest-hood dignity and orna●… d In the day This place Saint Iames in the Acts testifieth to be meant of the calling of 〈◊〉 Nations Act. 15. 15. 16. The Apostles there avowing it who dares gaine-say it Esay his prophecies concerning Christ. CHAP. 29. ESaias a is none of the twelue prophets They are called the small prophets because their prophecies are briefe in comparison of others that wrote large ●…mes of whom Esay was one whom I adde here because he liued in the times 〈◊〉 two afore-named In his precepts against sin and for goodnesse his pro●…cies of tribulation for offending hee forgetteth not also to proclame Christ 〈◊〉 his Church more amply then any other in so much that b some call him an ●…gelist rather then a Prophet One of his prophecies heare in briefe because I 〈◊〉 stand vpon many In the person of God the Father thus hee saith c Be●… my son shal vnderstand he shal be exalted and be very high as many were astonied 〈◊〉 thy forme was so despised by men and thy beauty by the sons of men so shall ma●…ions admire him the kings shal be put to silence at his sight for that which they 〈◊〉 not heard of him shall they see and that which hath not beene told them they shall ●…stand Lord who will beleeue our report to whom is the Lords arme reuealed wee 〈◊〉 ●…clare him as an infant and as a roote out of a dry ground he hath neither forme ●…ty when wee shall see him hee shall haue neither goodlinesse nor glory but his 〈◊〉 ●…albe despised and reiected before all men He is a man full of sorrowes and hath ●…ce of infirmities For his face is turned away he was despised and we esteem●… not Hee hath borne our sinnes and sorroweth for vs yet did we iudge him as 〈◊〉 of God and smitten and humbled But hee was wounded for our transgressions 〈◊〉 broken for our iniquities our peace we learned by him and with his stripes wee are 〈◊〉 We haue all straied like sheepe man ha●… lost his way and vpon him hath GOD 〈◊〉 our guilt He was afflicted vet neuer opened he his mouth he was led as a sheepe 〈◊〉 slaughter as 〈◊〉 Lambe before the shearer is dumbe so was he opened not his 〈◊〉 hee was out from prison vnto iudgement O who shall declare his generation 〈◊〉 shal be taken out of life For the transgression of my people was he plagued and ●…l giue the wicked for his graue and the ritch for his death because hee hath 〈◊〉 wickednesse nor was there any d deceite found in his mouth The LORD 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 him from his affliction e If you giue your soule for sinne you shall see the 〈◊〉 ●…tinue long and the LORD shall take his soule from sorrow to shew him light ●…firme his vnderstanding to iustifie the righteous seruing many for he bare their ●…ties Therefore I will giue him a portion with the great hee shall diuide the 〈◊〉 of the strong because hee hath powred out his soule vnto death Hee was recko●…●…ith the transgressors and hath borne the sinnes of many and was betraied ●…ir trespasses Thus much of CHRIST n●… what saith he of his church 〈◊〉 O barren that bearest not breake forth and crie out for ioy tho●… that bringest ●…th for
some that is from the b South signifyeth the heate of charity and the light of truth The thicke darke mountaine may bee taken diuersly but I rather choose to hold it meant of the depth of the holy scriptures prophecying Christ for therein are many depths for the industrious to excercise themselues in and which they finde out when they find him whom they concerne His glory couereth the heauens and the earth is full of his praise that is iust as the psalme saith Exalt thy selfe O GOD aboue the heauens and let thy glorie bee aboue all the earth His brightnesse was as the light His glorie shall enlighten the nations Hee had hornes comming out of his hands that was his extension on the crosse there was the hiding of his power this is plaine Before him went the word and followed him into the field that is hee was prophecied ere hee came and preached after his departure hee stood and the earth mooued hee stood to saue and earth was mooued with beleeuing in him He beheld the nations and they were dissolued that is hee pitied and they repented Hee brake the mountaines with violence that is his miracles amazed the proude the eternall his did bow the people were temporally humbled to bee eternally glorified For my paines I saw his goings in that is I had the reward of eternity for my labours in charity the tents of Ethiope trembled and so did they of Madian that is euen those nations that were neuer vnder Rome by the terror of thy name and power preached shall become subiect to Christ. Was the Lord angry against the riuers or wa●… thine anger against the sea this implieth that he came not to iudge the world but to saue it thou rodest vpon horses and thy Chariot brought saluati●… The Euangelists are his horses for hee ruleth them and the Gospell his Chariot saluation to all beleeuers thou shalt bend thy bowe aboue scepters thy iudgement shall restraine euen the Kings of the earth thou shalt cleaue the earth with riuers that is thine abundant doctrine shall open the hearts of men to beleeue them vnto such it is sayd Rend your hearts and not your garments The people shall see thee and tremble thou shall spread the ●…aters as thou goest thy preachers shall power out the streames of thy doctrine on all sides The deepe made anoise the depth of mans heart expressed what it saw the hight of his phantasie that is the deepe gaue out the voice expressing as I sayd what it saw This phantasie was a vision which hee conceiled not but proclaimed at full The Sunne was extolled and the Moone kept her place Christ was assumed into heauen and by him is the church ruled thine arrowes flew in the light Thy word was openly taught and by the brightnesse of thy shining arme●… thine arrowes flew For Christ himselfe had said What I tell you in darkenesse that speake in the light Thou shalt tread downe the land in anger thou shalt humble high spirits by afflicting them Thou shalt thresh the heathen in displeasure that is thou shalt quell the ambitious by thy iudgements thou wentest forth to saue thy people and thine annointed thou laidest death vpon the heads of the wicked all this is plaine thou hast cut them off with amazement thou hast cut downe bad and set vppe good in wonderfull manner the mighty shall crowne their heads which maruell at this they shall gape after thee as a poore man eating secretly For so diuers great men of the Iewes beeing hungry after the bread of life came to eate secretly fearing the Iewes as the Gospell sheweth thou pu●…test thine horses into the sea who troubled the waters that is the people for vnlesse all were troubled some should not become fearefull conuertes and others furious persecutors I marked it and my body trembled at the sound of my lippes feare came into my bones and I was altogether troubled in my selfe See the hight of his praier and his prescience of those great euents amazed euen himselfe and hee is troubled with those seas to see the imminent persecutions of the church whereof hee lastly avoucheth himselfe a member saying I will rest in the da●…e of trouble as if hee were one of the hopefull sufferers and patient reioycers that I may goe vppe to the people of my pilgrimage leauing his carnall kinred that wander after nothing but worldly matters neuer caring for their supernall countrie ●…or the fig-tree shall not fructifie nor shall fruite bee in the vines the oliue shall fa●…le and the fields shal be fruitlesse The sheepe haue left their meate and the oxen are not in their stalles Here hee seeth the nation that crucified CHRIST depriued of all spirituall goods prefigured in those corporall fertilities and because the countries ignorance of God had caused these plagues forsaking Gods righteousnesse through their owne pride hee addeth this I will reioyce in the Lord and ioy in God my Sauiour the Lord my God is my strength he will establish my feete hee will set mee vpon high places that I may bee victorious in his song What song euen such as the psalmist speaketh of hee hath set my feete vpon the rocke and ordered my goings and hath put into my mouth a new song of praise vnto GOD. In such a song and not in one of his owne praise doth Ah●…cuc conquer glorying in the Lord his God Some bookes read this place better 〈◊〉 I 〈◊〉 ioy in my LORD IESVS But the translators had not the name it selfe in Latine other-wise wee like the word a great deale better L. VIVES FRom a Theman Aquila Symmachus and the fifth edition saith Hierome put the very word so Onely T●…tion expresseth it from the South c. Theman is ●…nder Edo●… in the land of G●…bal named so by Theman sonne to Elyphaz the sonne of Esau and it holdeth the name vnto this day lying fiue miles from Petra where the Romaine garrison lyeth and where Eliphaz King of the Thebans was borne One also of the sonnes of Isaacs was called Theman Indeed the Hebrews call euery Southerne Prouince Theman Hieron loc Hebraic b S●…th Such is that place also in the Canticles c The thick darke mountaine S●… say the LXX but the Hebrewes from mount Paran which is a towne on the farre side of Arabia ioyning to the Sarazens The Israelites went by it when they left Sina The LXX rather expressed the adiacents then the place it selfe d Neuer vnder Rome India Persia and the new sound lands e I will ioy So doth the Hebrew read it indeed Iesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Sauiour are all one In Tullyes time they had not the Latine word Saluator Act. 〈◊〉 in Verr. but Lactantius Au●… and many good Latinists doe vse it since Read Hierome of this verse if you would know further Prophecies of Hieromie and Zephany concerning the former themes CHAP. 33. HIeremy a is one of the greater Prophets so is Isay●… not of
of Iuda kiiled Cbr. 2. 34. 21. he whome Christ said was killed betweene the Temple and the Altar Mat. 23. 35. b Malachi His name interpreted is His Angell and so the seauenty called him where-vpon Origen vpon this prophet saith that hee thinketh it was an Angell that prophecyed this prophecy if we may beleeue Hieromes testimony herein Others call him Malachi for indeed names are not to be altered in any translation No man calleth Plato Broade Or Aristotle good perfection or Iosuah the Sauiour or Athens Minerua Names are to be set downe in the proper Idiome other-wise the names of famous men being translated into seuerall tongues should obscure their persons fame by being the more dispersed which makes me wonder at those that will wring the Greeke names c. vnto their seuerall Idiomes wherein their owne conceit doth them grosse wrong Caesar was wise to deale plainely in giuing the french Germaine each his contries names only making them declinable by the Latine But to Malachi Some by concordance of their stides say that he was Esdras and prophecied vnder Darius the sonne of Histaspis Of Esdras in the next chapter c Reioyce greatly This whole quotation and the rest differ much from our vulgar translation d Upon a colt The Euangelist S. Mathew readeth it vpon a colt and the fole of an asse ●…sed to the yoke cha 21. ver 5. The Iewes that were yoaked vnder so many ceremonies were prefigured herein But the free and yong colt as the seauenty do translate it was the type of the Gentiles take which you will God sitteth vpon both to cure both from corruption and to bring both saluation e Shalbe incense offred The seauenty read it is offred because the Prophets often speake of things to come as if they were present yea and some-times as if they were past The translation of the seauenty is some-what altred in the following quotation Of the bookes of Esdras and the Machabees CHAP. 36. AFter Agee Zachary Malachy the three last Prophets in the time of the said captiuity a Esdras wrote but he is rather held an Historiographer then a Prophet As the booke of b Hester is also contayning accidents about those times all tending to the glory of God It may bee said that Esdras prophecied in this that when the question arose amongst the young men what thing was most powerfull one answering Kings the next wine and the third women for they often command Kings c yet did the third adde more and said that truth conquered althings Now Christ in the Gospell is found to bee the truth From this time after the temple was re-edified the Iewes had no more kings but princes vnto d Aristobulus his time The account of which times wee haue not in 〈◊〉 canonicall scriptures but in the others e amongst which the bookes of the Machabees are also which the church indeed holdeth for canonicall f because of the vehement and wonderfull suffrings of some Martires for the law of God before the comming of Christ. Such there were that endured intollerable ●…ments yet these bookes are but Apocryphall to the Iewes L. VIVES 〈◊〉 a A most skilfull scribe of the law he was Hierom saith he was that Iosedech whose 〈◊〉 Iesus was priest He they say restored the law which y● Chaldaees had burnt not without 〈◊〉 assistance changed the hebrew letters to distinguish thē frō the Samaritanes Gentiles which then filled Iudea Euseb. The Iewes afterwards vsed his letters only their accents differed from the Samaritans which were the old ones that Moyses gaue them b Hester 〈◊〉 ●…tory fell out saith Iosephus in the time of Artaxerxes other-wise called Cyrus for Xerxes was the sonne of Darius Histaspis and Artaxerxes surnamed Long-hand was sonne to him in whose time the Iewes were in such danger by meanes of Haman because of Mardochee Hesters vncle as there booke sheweth This Nicephorus holdeth also But Eusebius saith this could not bee that the Iewes should bee in so memorable a perill and yet Esdras who wrot their fortunes vnder Artaxerxes neuer once mention it So that hee maketh this accident to fall out long after in the time of Artaxerxes Mnemon bastard sonne to Darius and him the Hebrewes called Assuerus saith hee Indeed Bede is of this minde also But I feare Eusebius his accompt is not so sure as Iosephus but in this wee recite opinions onely leauing the iudgement c Yet did the third This was Zarobabel that said truth was about all Esd. 33. los. Ant. lib. 11. but the third and fourth booke of Esdras are Apocryphall Hierome reiecteth them as dreames d Aristobulus Sonne to Ionathas both King and Priest he wore the first diademe in Iudaea foure hundred eighty and foure yeares after the captiuity vnder Nabucadonosor e Machabees Hierome saw the first of those bookes in Hebrew the latter hee knew to bee penned first in Greeke by the stile Iosephus wrot the history of the Machabees as Hierome saith Contra Pellagian I cannot tell whether hee meane the bookes that we haue for scripture or another Greeke booke that is set forth seuerall and called Ioseph●…ad Machabeos There is a third booke of the Machabees as yet vntranslated into Latine that I know of that I thinke the Church hath not receiued for canonicall f Because of ●…or there were seuen brethren who rather then they woold breake the law endured together with their mother to be flayed quicke rather then to obey that foule command of Antiochus against God The Prophets more ancient then any of the Gentile Philosophers CHAP. 37. IN our a Prophets time whose workes are now so farre diuulged there were no Philosophers stirring as yet for the first of them arose from b Pithagoras of Samos who began to bee famous at the end of the captiuity So that all other Philosophers must needes bee much later c for Socrates of Athens the chiefe Moralist of his time liued after Esdras as the Chronicles record And ●…o one after was Plato borne the most excellent of all his scholers To whom if we ad also the former seauen who were called sages not Philosophers and the Naturalists that followed Thales his study to wit Anaximander Anaximenes Anaxagoras and others before Pythagoras professed Philosophy not one of these was before the Prophets for Thales the most ancient of them all liued in Romulus his time when this Propheticall doctrine flowed from the fountaine of Israell to be deriued vnto all the world Onely therefore the Theologicall Poets Orpheus Linus Musaeus and the others if there were anymore were before our canonicall prophets But they were not more ancient then our true diuine Moyses who taught them one true God and whose bookes are in the front of our Canon and therfore though the learning of Greece warmeth the world at this day yet neede they not boast of their wisdome being neither so ancient nor so excellent as our diuine religion and the true wisdome we confesse not that
themselues from others as all others betters Both sorts taught the law out of●… Moyses chaire the scribes the litterall sence and the Pharisees the misteries c Astronomy Geometry Arithmetick and Astronomy were the ancient Egyptians onely studies Necessity made them Geometers for Nilus his in-undations euery yeare tooke away the boundes of their lands so that each one was faine to know his owne quantity and how it lay and in what forme and thus they drewe the principles of that art Now aptnesse made thē Astronomers for their nights were cleare neuer cloud came on their land so as they might easily discerne all the motions stations rising and fall of euery star a ●…udy both wondrous delectable and exceeding profitable and beseeming the excellence of 〈◊〉 now these two arts could not consist without number and so Arithmetick gotte vp for the third d Before the sages A diuersity of reading rather worth nothing then noting The Aegyptians abhominable lyings to claime their wisdome the age of 100000. yeares CHAP. 40. IT is therefore a monstrous absurdity to say as some doe that it is aboue 100000. yeares since Astronomie began in Egipt What recordes haue they for this that had their letters but two thousand yeares agoe or little more from Isis. Varro's authority is of worth here agreeing herein with the holy Scriptures For seeing it is not yet sixe thousand yeares from the first man Adam how ridiculous are they that ouer-runne the truth such a multitude of yeares whome shall wee beleeue in this so soone as him that fore-told what now we see accordingly effected The dissonance of histories giueth vs leaue to leane to such as doe accorde with our diuinitie The cittizens of Babilon indeed being diffused all the earth ouer when they read two authors of like and allowable authority differing in relations of the eldest memory they know not which to beleeue But we haue a diuine historie to vnder-shore vs and wee know that what so euer seculer author he bee famous or obscure if hee contradict that hee goeth farre ●…ay from truth But bee his words true or false they are of no valew to the at●…ement of true felicitie The dissension of Philosophers and the concord of the Canonicall Scriptures CHAP. 41. BVt to leaue history and come to the Philosophers whom wee left long agoe their studies seemed wholy to ayme at the attainment of beatitude Why did the schollers then contradict their maisters but that both were whirled away with humaine affects wherein a although there might be some spice of vaine-glory each thinking him-selfe wiser and quicker conceited then other and affecting to bee an Arch-dogmatist him-selfe and not a follower of others notwithstanding to grant that it was the loue of truth that carried some or the most of them from their teachers opinions to contend for truth were it truth or were it none what course what act can mortall misery performe to the obtaining of true blessednesse with-out it haue a diuine instruction as for our Canonicall authors God forbid that they should differ No they do not and therefore Worthily did so many nations beleeue that God spoake either in them or by them this the multitude in other places learned and vnlearned doe auow though your petty company of ianglers in the schooles denie it Our Prophets were but few ●…east being more their esteeme should haue beene lesse which religion ought ●…ghly to reuerence yet are they not so few but that their concord is iustly to be admired Let one looke amongst all the multitude of philosophers writings and if he finde two that tell both one tale in all respects it may be registred for a rari●… It were two much for me to stand ranking out their diuersities in this worke 〈◊〉 what Dogmatist in all this Hierarchy of Hell hath any such priuiledge that 〈◊〉 may not bee controuled and opposed by others with gracious allow●… to both partes were not the Epi●…urists in great accoumpt at Athens ●…ing that GOD had naught to doe with man And were not the Stoikes their opponents that held the Gods to bee the directors of all things euen as gratious as they Wherfore I maruell that b Anaxagoras was accused for saying the sunne was a fiery stone denying the god-head thereof Epicurus being allowed and graced in that Citty who diuided both deities of sunne starres yea of Ioue him-selfe c and all the rest in all respect of the world and mans supplications vnto them was not Aristippus there with his bodily summum bonum and Antisthenes with his mentall Both famous Socratists and yet both so farre contrary each to other in their subiects of beatitude The one bad a wise man flye rule the other bad him take it and both had full and frequent audience Did not euery one defend his opinion in publike in the towne d g●…llery in e schooles in f gardens and likewise in all priuate places One g held one world another a thousand some hold that one created some not created some hold it eternall some not eternall some say it ruled by the power of God others by chance Some say the soules are immortall others mortall some transfuse them into beasts others deny it some of those that make them mortall say they dye presently after the body others say they liue longer yet not for euer some place the cheefest good in the body some in the soule some in both some draw the externall goods to the soule and the body some say the sences go alwaie true some say but some-times some say neuer These and millions more of dissentions do the Phylosophers bandy and what people state kingdom or citty of all the diabolicall socyety hath euer brought them to the test or reiected these and receiued the other But hath giuen nourishment to all confusion in their very bosomes and vpheld the rable of curious ianglers not about lands or cases in lawe but vppon mayne poynts of misery and blisse Wherein if they spoke true they had as good leaue to speake false so fully and so fitly sorted their society to the name of Babilon which as we sayd signifieth confusion Nor careth their King the diuell how much they iangle it procureth him the larger haruest of variable impiety But the people state nation and Citty of Israell to whome Gods holy lawes were left they vsed not that licentious confusion of the false Prophets with the the true but all in one consent held and acknowledged the later for the true authors recording Gods testimonies These were their Sages their Poets their Prophets their teachers of truth and piety Hee that liued after their rules followed not man but God who spake in them The sacriledge forbidden there God forbiddeth the commandement of honour thy father and mother God commandeth Thou shalt not commit adultery nor murder nor shalt steale Gods wisdome pronounceth this not the witte of man For h what truth soeuer the Philosophers attayned and disputed off amidst their falshood as
namely that God framed the world and gouerned it most excellently of the honesty of vertue the loue of our countrey the faith of friendship iust dealing and all the appendances belonging to good manners they knew not to what end the whole was to bee referred The Prophets taught that from the mouth of God in the persons of men not with inundations of arguments but with apprehension of fear and reuerence of the Lord in all that understood them L VIVES ALthough a there be Vain-glory led almost all the ancient authors wrong stuffing artes with infamous errors grosse and pernicious each one seeking to be the proclamer of his own opinion rather then the preferrer of anothers Blind men they saw not how laudable it is to obey Good councell to agree vnto truth I knew a man once not so learned as arrogant who professed that hee would write much and yet avoyd what others had said before him as hee would fly a serpent or a Basiliske for that hee had rather wittingly affirme a lie then assent vnto the opinion b Anaxagoras A stone fell once out of the ayre into Aegos ariuer in Thracia and Anaxagoras who had also presaged it affirmed that heauen was made all of stones and that the sonne was a firy stone where-vpon Euripides his scholler calleth it a golden turfe In Phaetonte for this assertion Sotion accused him of impiety and Pericles his scholler pleaded for him yet was he fined at fiue talents and perpetuall banishment Others say otherwise But the most say that Pericles who was great in the Citty saued his life being condemned where-vpon the Poets faigned that Ioue was Angry at Anaxagoras and threw a thunder-bolt at him but Pericles stept betweene and so it flew another way c And all the rest Epicurus held Gods but excluded them from medling in humane affayres and hearing vs indeed his vnder ayme was Atheisme but the Areopage awed him from professing it for farewell such Gods as wee haue no neede on saith Cotta in Tully d Towne gallery There taught the stoikes e Schooles As the Peripatetiques in the Lycaeum f Gardens As the Ep●…cureans did g Some held Of these we spake at large vpon the eight booke h What truth soeuer Euse. de praep Euang prooueth by many arguments that Plato had all his excellent position out of the scriptures Of the translations of the Old-Testament out of Hebrew into Greeke by the ordinance of God for the benefit of the nations CHAP. 42. THese scriptures one a Ptolomy a king of Egypt desired to vnderstand for after the strange admirable conquest of Alexander of Macedon surnamed the great wherein he brought all Asia and almost all the world vnder his subiection partly by faire meanes and partly by force who came also into Iudaea his nobles after his death making a turbulent diuision or rather a dilaceration of his monarchy Egypt came to be ruled by Ptolomyes The first of which was the soone of Lagus who brought many Iewes captiue into Egypt the next was Philadelphus who freed all those captiues sent guifts to the temple and desired Eleazar the Priest to send him the Old-testament whereof he had hard great commendations and therefore hee ment to put it into his famous library Eleazar sent it in Hebrew and then hee desired interpretours of him and he sent him seauenty two sixe of euery tribe all most perfect in the Greeke and Hebrew Their translation doe wee now vsually call the Septuagints b The report of their diuine concord therein is admirable for Ptolomy hauing to try their faith made each one translate by him-selfe there was not one word difference between them either in sence or order but al was one as if only one had done them all because indeede there was but one spirit in them all And God gaue them that admirable guift to giue a diuine commemdation to so diuin a worke wherin the nations might see that presaged which wee all see now effected L VIVES ONe a Ptolomy The Kings of Egypt were all called Pharaos vntill Cambyses added that kingdome vnto the Monarchy of Persia. But after Alexander from Ptolomy sonof Lagus they were al called Ptolomies vntil Augustus made Egipt a prouince Alexander was abroad 〈◊〉 an army 21. yeares in which time he subdued al Asia but held it but a while for in the 32. 〈◊〉 of his age he died and then his nobles ranne all to share his Empire as it had bin a bro●… filled with gold euery one got what he could and the least had a Kingdome to his 〈◊〉 Antigonus got Asia Seleucus Chaldaea Cassander Macedonia each one somewhat Pto●… Egypt Phaenicia and Ciprus hee was but of meane descent Lagus his father was one of Alexanders guard and hee from a common soldior got highly into the fauour of his Prince for his valor discretion and experience Being old and addicted to peace he left his crowne to his sonne Philadelphus who had that name either for louing his sister Arsinoe or for hating her afterwards a contrario He freed all the Iewes whome his father had made captiues and set Iudaea free from a great tribute and being now growen old and diseased by the perswasion of Demetrius Phalereus whome enuy had chased from Athens thether hee betooke him-selfe to study gathered good writers together buylt that goodly librarie of Alexandria wherein he placed the Old-Testament for hee sent to Eleazar for translators for the law and Prophets who being mindfull of the good hee had done to Iudaea sent him the seauenty two interpretours whome from breuity sake we call the seauenty as the Romaines ca●…led the hundred and fiue officers the Centumuirs In Iosephus are the Epistles of Ptolomy to Eleazar and his vnto him lib. 12. There is a booke of the seauenty interpreters that goeth vnder his name but I take it to be a false birth b The report of Ptolomy honored those interpreters highly To try the truth by their Agreement saith Iustine hee built seauenty two chambers placing a translator in euery one to write therein and when they had done conferred them all and their was not a letter difference Apologet. ad Gent. The ruines of these Iustine saith he saw in Pharos the tower of Alexandria Menedemus the Philosopher admired the congruence in the translation Tertull. Aduers gentes Hierome some-times extolls their translation as done by the holy spirit and some-times condemneth it for euill and ignorant as hee was vehement in all opposition that story of their chambers ●…e scoffeth at for this he saith I know not what hee was whose lyes built the chambers for the seauenty at Alexandria where they might write seuerall when as Aristeas one of Ptolomies gard saith that they all wrote in one great pallace not as Prophets for a prophet is one thing and a translatour another the one speaketh out of inspiration and the other translateth out of vnderstanding Prolog in Pentateuch That the
oppressed and such like as these Oh who can stand to collect or recount them These now albeit they kept this seemingly absurd order continually that in 〈◊〉 whole life wherein as the Prophet saith in the Psalme Man is like to 〈◊〉 and his daies like a shadow that vanisheth the wicked alone should pos●… those temporall goods and the good onelie suffer euills yet might this 〈◊〉 referred to GODS iust iudgements yea euen to his mercies that such 〈◊〉 ●…ught not for eternall felicitie might either for their malice bee iustly 〈◊〉 by this transitory happinesse or by GODS mercie bee a comfort vnto the good and that they beeing not to loose the blisse eternall might for 〈◊〉 while bee excercised by crosses temporall either for the correction of 〈◊〉 or a augmentation of their vertues 〈◊〉 now seeing that not onely the good are afflicted and the badde ex●… which seemes iniustice but the good also often enioy good and the 〈◊〉 euill this prooues GODS iudgements more inscrutable and his 〈◊〉 more vnsearcheable Although then wee see no cause why GOD ●…ld doe thus or thus hee in whome is all wisdome and iustice and no ●…nesse nor rashnesse nor iniustice yet heere wee learne that wee may 〈◊〉 esteeme much of those goods or misfortunes which wee see the badde share with the righteous But to seeke the good peculiar to the one and to a●… the euill reserued for the other And when we come to that great iudgement properly called the day of doome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 consummation of time there we shall not onely see all things apparant but ●…ledge all the iudgements of GOD from the first to the last to bee firme●…●…ded vpon iustice And there wee shall learne and know this also why 〈◊〉 iudgements are generally incomprehensible vnto vs and how iust his ●…nts are in that point also although already indeede it is manifest vnto ●…full that wee are iustly as yet ignorant in them all or at least in the 〈◊〉 them L. VIVES 〈◊〉 augmentation That vertue might haue meanes to exercise her powers for shee 〈◊〉 ●…ction and leauing that shee languisheth nay euen perisheth as fire doth which 〈◊〉 ●…ell to worke vpon dieth But practise her vpon obiects of aduerse fortune and she 〈◊〉 out her owne perfection Salomons disputation in Ecclesiastes concerning those goods which both the iust and the vniust doe share in CHAP. 3. 〈◊〉 the wisest King that euer reigned ouer Israel beginneth his booke cal●… a Ecclesiastes which the Iewes themselues hold for Canonicall in this 〈◊〉 b Vanity of Vanities all is vanity What remaineth vnto man of all ●…uells which hee suffereth vnder the Sunne Vnto which hee annex●… tormentes and tribulations of this declining worlde and the short ●…ift courses of time wherein nothing is firme nothing constant 〈◊〉 vanitie of althings vnder the Sunne hee bewayleth this also 〈◊〉 that seeing c There is more profitte in wisdome then in follie 〈◊〉 light is more excellent then darkenesse and seeing the wise-mans eyes are in his head when the foole wallketh in darkenesse yet that one condition one estate should befall them both as touching this vaine and transitory life meaning hereby that they were both a like exposed to those euills that good men and bad do some-times both a like endure Hee saith further that the good shall suffer as the bad do and the bad shall enioy goods as the good do in these words There is a vanity which is done vpon the earth that there bee righteous men to whome it commeth according to the worke of the wicked and there bee wicked men to whome it commeth according to the worke of the iust I thought also that this is vanity In discouery of this vanity the wise man wrote al this whole worke for no other cause but that wee might discerne that life which is not vanity vnder the sunne but truth vnder him that made the sunne But as d touching this worldly vanity is it not Gods iust iudgement that man being made like it should vanish also like it yet in these his daies of vanity there is much betweene the obeying and the opposing of truth and betweene partaking and neglecting of Godlinesse and goodnesse but this is not in respect of attayning or auoyding any terrestriall goods or euills but of the great future iudgment which shall distribute goods to the good and euils to the euil to remaine with them for euer Finally the said wise King concludeth his booke thus feare God and keepe his commandements for this is the whole duty of man for GOD will bring euery worke vnto iudgment e of euery dispisedman be it good or be it euill how can wee haue an instruction more briefe more true or more wholesome feare God saith he and keepe his commandements for this is the whole duty of man for he that doth this is full man and he that doth it not is in accompt nothing because he is not reformed according to the Image of truth but sticketh still in the shape of vanity for God will bring euery worke that is euery act of man in this life vnto iudgement be it good or euill yea the workes of euery dispised man of euery contemptible person that seemeth not t●… be noted at all God seeth him and despiseth him not neither ouer-passeth him in his iudgement L. VIVES ECclesiastes a Or the Preacher Many of the Hebrewes say that Salomon wrot this in the time of his repentance for the wicked course that he had runne Others say that he fore-saw the diuision of his kingdome vnder his sonne Rehoboam and therefore wrote it in contempt of the worlds vnstable vanity b Uanity of So the seauenty read it but other read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 smoke of fumes Hierome c There is more Wisdome and folly are as much opposed as light and darkenesse d Touching this But that GOD instructeth our vnderstanding in this vanity it would vanish away and come to nought conceyuing falshood for truth and lying all consumed with putrifiing sinne at length like a fume it would exhale a way vnto che second death e Of euery despised man Our translations read it with euery secret thing Hierome hath it Pro omni errato The authors resolution in this discourse of the iudgement to produce the testimonies of the New-Testament first and then of the old CHAP. 4. THe testimonies of holy Scriptures by which I meane to proue this last iudgement of God must bee first of all taken out of the New-Testament and then out of the Old For though the later bee the more ancient yet the former are more worthie as beeing the true contents of the later The former then shall proceed first and they shal be backt by the later These that is the old ones the law and the prophets afford vs the former the new ones the Gospells and the writings of the Apostles Now the Apostle saith By the law commeth the knowledge of sinne But now
God knoweth those that bee his and the deuill cannot draw a soule of them vnto damnation For this God knoweth as knowing all things to come not as one man seeth another in presence and cannot tell what shall be-come either of him hee seeth or of him-selfe here-after The diuell was therefore bound and locked vp that hee should no more seduce the nations the Churches members whom he had held in errour and impiety before they were vnited vnto the Church It is not said that hee should deceiue no man any more but that he should deceiue the people no more whereby questionlesse hee meaneth the Church Proceed vntill the thousand yeares bee fulfilled that is either the remainder of the sixth day the last thousand or the whole time that the world was to continue Nor may wee vnderstand the deuill so to bee barred from seducing that at this time expired hee should seduce those nations againe whereof the Church consisteth and from which hee was forbidden before But this place is like vnto that of the Psalme Our eyes waite vpon the Lord vntill hee haue mercy vpon vs for the seruants of God take not their eyes from beholding as soone as he hath mercy vpon them or else the order of the words is this Hee ●…t him vp and sealed the doore vpon him vntill a thousand yeares were fulfilled all that commeth betweene namely that he should not deceiue the people hauing no necessary connexion here-vnto but beeing to bee seuerally vnderstood as if it were added afterwards and so the sence runne thus And he shut him vp and sealed the dore vpon him vntill a thousand yeares were fulfilled that hee should not seduce the people that is therefore hee shutte him vp so long that he should seduce them no more L. VIVES FRom the a thousand Iohns mention of a thousand yeares in this place and Christs words I will not drinke hence-forth of the fruite of the vine vntill that day that I drinke it new with you in my Fathers kingdome together with many Prophecies touching Christs kingdome in Hierusalem made some imagine that Christ would returne into the world raise the Saints in their bodyes and liue a thousand yeares heere on earth in all ioy peace and prosperitie farre exceeding the golden age of the Poets or that of Sybilla and Esayas The first Author of this opinion was Papias Bishop of Hierusalem who liued in the Apostles times Hee was seconded by Irenaeus Apollinarius Tertullian lib. de fidelium Victorinus 〈◊〉 Lactantius Diuin Instit. lib. 7. And although Hierome deride and scoffe at this opinion in many places yet in his fourth booke of his Commentaries vpon Hieremy hee saith that hee dare not condemne it because many holy martyrs and religious Christians held it so great an authority the person some-times giueth to the position that we must vse great modesty in our dissention with them and giue great reuerence to their godlynesse and grauity I cannot beleeue that the Saints held this opinion in that manner that Cerinthus the heretique did of whome wee read this in Eusebius Cerinthus held that Christ would haue an earthly kingdome in Hierusalem after the resurrection where the Saints should liue in all societie of humaine lusts and concupiscences Besides against all truth of scripture hee held that for a thousand yeares space this should hold with reuells and mariage and other works of corruption onely to de●…iue the carnall minded person Dionisius disputing of S. Iohns reuelation and reciting some ancient traditions of the Church hath thus much concerning this man Cerinthus quoth he the author of the Cerinthian heresie delighted much in getting his sect authority by wresting of scripture His heresie was that Christs Kingdome should bee terrestriall and being giuen vp vnto lust and gluttony himselfe he affirmed nothing but such things as those two affects taught him That all should abound with banquets and belly-chere and for the more grace to his assertions that the feasts of the law should be renewed and the offring of carnall sacrifices restored Irenaeus publisheth the secresie of this heresie in his first booke they that would know it may finde it there Thus farre Eusebius Hist. Eccl. lib. 3. wherefore this was not Papias his opinion whose originall Hierome would otherwise haue ascribed vnto Cerinthus who was more ancient then Papias a little though both liued in one age nor would Iraeneus haue written against Cerinthus for he allowed of Papias his opinion neither did all the sects agree in one as touching this thousand yeares but each one taught that which seemed likeliest vnto him-selfe and no wonder in so vaine a fiction Dionisius of Alexandria as Hierome affirmeth In Esai lib. 18. wro●… an elegant worke in derision of these Chiliasts and there Golden Hierusalem their reparation of the temple their bloud of sacrifices there Sabbath there circumsitions there birth there mariages there banquets there soueraignties their warres and tryumphs c. b The cheare shall exceed So saith Lactantius The earth shall yeeld her greatest faecundity and yeeld her plenty vntilled The rockie mountaines shall sweate hony the riuers shall runne wine and the fountaines milke To omit Cerinthus his relations which are farre more odious c Chiliast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a thousand d On the sixt day There is a report that in the bookes of Elias the Prophet it was recorded that the world should last 6000. yeares 2000. vnder vanity vnto Abraham 2000. vnder the law vnto Christ. and 2000. vnder Christ vnto the iudgement This by the Hebrewes account for the LXX haue aboue 3000. yeares from Adam to Abraham And in Augustines time the world lackt not 400 yeares of the full 6000. So that now our Vulgar accoumpt is aboue 6700. yeares Namely from Our Sauiour 1522. Whom Eusebius and such as follow the LXX affirme to haue beene borne in the yeare of the world 5100. and somewhat more Therefore Augustine saith that the later end of the 6000. yeares passed along in his time And Lactantius who liued before Augustine vnder Constantine saith that in his time there was but 200. of the 6000. yeares to runne Of the binding and loosing of the Diuell CHAP. 8. AFter that saith S. Iohn he must be loosed for a season Well although the Diuell be bound and lockt vp that he should not seduce the Church shall hee therefore be looosed to seduce it God forbid That Church which God predestinated and setled before the worlds foundation whereof it is written God knoweth those that be his that the Deuill shall neuer seduce and yet it shal be on earth euen at the time of his loosing as it hath continued in successiue estate euer since it was first erected for by and by after hee saith that the Diuill shall bring his seduced nations in armes against it whose number shal be as the sea sands And they went vp saith hee vnto the plaine of the earth and compassed the tents of the Saints about and
seruant namely that same forme of a seruant wherein the highest was humbled added the name of the man From whose stock hee was to deriue that seruile forme The spirit of God came vpon him in forme of a Doue as the Ghospell testifieth Hee brought forth iudgement to the Gentiles in fore telling them of future things which they neuer knew of before Hee dyd not crie out yet ceased hee not to preach Nor was his voyce heard with out or in the streete for such as are cut off from his fold neuer heare his voyce Hee neither broake downe nor extinguished those Iewes his persecutors whose lost integrity and abandoned light made them like brused Reedes and c smoaking flaxe hee spared them for as yet hee was not come to iudge them but to bee iudged by them Hee brought forth iudgment in truth by shewing them their future plagues if they persisted in their malice His face s●…one on the mount his fame in the whole world hee neither failed nor fainted in that both hee and his Church stood firme against all persecutions Therefore his foes neuer had nor euer shall haue cause to thinke that fulfilled which they wished in the Psalme saying When shall hee dye and his name perish vntill hee haue setled iudgement in the earth Loe here is that wee seeke The last iudgement is that which hee shall settle vpon earth comming to effect it out of heauen As for the last wordes the Iles shall hope in his name wee see it fulfilled already Thus then by this which is so vn-deniable is that prooued credible which impudence dares yet deny For who would euer haue hoped for that which the vnbeleeuers them-selues doe now behold as well as wee to their vtter heart-breaking and confusion d Who did euer looke that the Gentiles should embrace Christianity that had seene the Author thereof bound beaten mocked and crucified That which one theefe durst but hope for vpon the crosse in that now doe the nations farre and wide repose their vtmost confidence and least they should incurre eternall death are signed with that figure where-vpon hee suffered his temporall death Let none therefore make any doubt that Christ shall bring forth such a iudgment as the Scriptures doe promise except hee beleeue not the Scriptures and stand in his owne malicious blindnesse against that which hath enlightned all the world And this iudgment shall consist of these circumstances partly precedent and partly adiacent Helias shall come the Iewes shall beleeue Antichrist shall persecute Christ shall iudge the dead shall arise the good and bad shall seuer the world shall burne and bee renewed All this wee must beleeue shall bee but in what order our full experience then shall exceed our imperfect intelligence as yet Yet verily I doe thinke they shall fall out in order as I haue rehearsed them Now remaineth there two bookes more of this theame to the perfect performance of our promise the first of which shall treate of the paines due vnto the wicked and the second of the glories bestowed vpon the righteous wherein if it please GOD wee will subuert the arguments which foolish mortalls and miserable wretches make for them-selues against GODS holy and diuine pre mises and against the sacred nutriment giuen to the soule by an vnspotted faith thinking them-selues the onely wise-men in these their vngratious cauills and deriding all religious instructions as contemptible and rid●…culous As for those that are wise in GOD in all that seemeth most incredible vnto man if it bee auouched by the holy Scriptures whose truth wee haue already sufficiently prooued they laye hold vpon the true and omnipotent deity as the strongest argument against all opposition for hee they know cannot possiblye speake false in those Scriptures and with-all can by his diuine power effect that which may seeme more then most impossible to the vn beleeuers L. VIVES GHrist a in person According to this iudgement of Christ did the Poets faigne th●… Iudges of hell for holding Ioue to be the King of Heauen they auoutched his sonne to be iudge of hell yet none of his sonnes that were wholy immortall at first as Bacchus Apollo or Mercurie was but a God that had beene also a mortall man and a iust man withall such as Minos Aeacus or Rhadamanthus was This out of Lactantius lib. 7. b No mention Hierom. in 42. Esai c Smoking flaxe It was a custome of old saith Plutarch in Quaestionib neuer to put out the snuffe of the lampe but to let it die of it selfe and that for diuers reasons first because this fire was some-what like in nature to that inextinguible immortall fire of heauen secondly they held this fire to be a liuing creature and therefore not to bee killed but when it did mischiefe That the fire was aliuing creature the want that it hath of nutriment and the proper motion besides the grone it seemeth to giue when it is quenshed induced them to affirme Thirdly because it is vnfit to destroy any thing that belongeth to mans continuall vse as fire or water c. But wee ought to leaue them to others when our owne turnes are serued Thus far Plutarch The first reason tendeth to religion the second to mansuetude the third to humanity d Who did euer looke Christ was not ignora●… of the time to come nor of the eternity of his doctrine as his leauing it to the publishing of onely twelue weake men against the malicious opposition of all Iudea and his commanding them to preach it throughout the whole world doth sufficiently prooue besides his prophecying to the Apostles that they should all abandon him and hee bee led to death that night and yet againe hee promiseth them to be with them to the end of the world Finis lib. 20. THE CONTENTS OF THE ONE and twentith booke of the City of God 1. Why the punishment of the damned is here disputed of before the happinesse of the Saints 2. Whether an earthly body may possibly bee incorruptible by fire 3. Whether a fleshly body may possibly endure eternall paine 4. Natures testimonies that bodies may remaine vndiminished in the fire 5. Of such things as cannot bee assuredlie knowne to be such and yet are not to be doubted of 6. All strange effects are not natures some are mans deuises some the deuills 7. Gods omnipotency the ground of all beliefe in things admired 8. That the alteration of the knowne nature of any creature vnto a nature vnknowne is not opposite vnto the lawes of nature 9. Of Hell and the quality of the eternall paines therein 10. Whether the fire of hell if it be corporall can take effect vpon the incorporeal deuills 11. Whether it be not iustice that the time of the paines should bee proportioned to the time of the sinnes and cri●…es 12. The greatnesse of Adams sin inflicting eternall damnation vpon all that are out of the state of grace 13. Against such as hold that the torments after the